Business demand for desktops and laptops is expected to return to growth early next year after a series of declines in recent quarters. But uncertainty remains, as macroeconomic concerns persist.
According to data shared by Gartner, Indian shipments of laptops and desktops are expected to drop 13.4% this calendar year to 12.4 million units from 14.4 million last year.
turn to tech. shipments of personal computers globally dropped by almost a third in the first three months of this year. as fears of economic recessions it starts to bite. that s according to market research from idc, one of the company hit the hardest was apple. a business report is katie silva, she s been looking into the story for us. katie, always great to get you on the shelf what does the research tell us? the? does the research tell us? they looked at the does the research tell us? they looked at the five does the research tell us? they looked at the five biggest - does the research tell us? tia: looked at the five biggest players in the pc market, that is blue novo, hp, delland basis in the pc market, that is blue novo, hp, dell and basis overall the first three months of this year compared to the same time last year it was 57 million their computers was up that is a drop of close to 30%. the hardest hit amongst them was apple. we saw a 4% drop in apple computers. they also
on the deck. and those are bound to give interesting elements as well. of course american express the more flew ird investor as well as market participant, and chevron a well, it is interesting to see whether the upper end have agreed to go into that vehicle sentiment. but interestingly, intel expecting to lose more money in the current quarter. surprising investors with a bleaker than expected outlook for both the pc market as well as the key data center division. they have missed on the top as well as on the bottom line. so weak guidance there pointing to more trouble for the company. certainly not good when it comes to the earnings picture. we also had visa out with its numbers, revenue growth continuing to wind back to pre-pandemic levels in that first quarter number. the post-lockdown travel craze seeming to ebb and flow and consumer spending is slowing in what is a tough economy.